She Married Her Boyfriend To Save His Life, Then He Started Treating Her Like An Unlimited ATM

Few experiences test a relationship more than a life-changing medical diagnosis. When one partner becomes a full-time caregiver and financial provider almost overnight, love and commitment are often pushed to their limits in ways neither person could have imagined.

The original poster (OP) never hesitated to marry her longtime boyfriend after he was diagnosed with cancer, hoping to make sure he had health insurance and one less thing to worry about during treatment.

At first, the arrangement brought them closer together, but as the months passed, a series of unexpected decisions began placing enormous emotional and financial strain on their marriage.

Now, the OP is wondering how to express her feelings without making an already heartbreaking situation even worse. Scroll down to read the full story.

Wife’s support is tested as her terminally ill husband makes costly choices

She Married Her Boyfriend To Save His Life, Then He Started Treating Her Like An Unlimited ATM
not the actual photo

'My (29F) husband (27M) is likely going to die soon from cancer, but I feel like he is taking advantage of my support?'

My husband (then boyfriend) was diagnosed with cancer a year ago.

His work contract was expiring and they didn't extend it when they found out he had cancer,

and since I have pretty good health insurance, we decided to get married so he would still be

covered. I told him he doesn't need to find another job because I make enough to cover our

expenses and I wanted him to focus on getting better. Before this, our relationship was great

and we felt like we were going to get married at some point anyways,

so we might as well do it now.

At first this worked great for us. He could relax at home with our dog and my work schedule

was flexible enough where I can go with him to his appointments and we weren't financially

unstable. I was able to pay all of our bills and his medical expenses, and even send him some

spending money so he would have some funds of his own.

But he started doing some really irresponsible financial decisions that are really taking a hit

on my wallet. The timeline is kind of messy so I will do my best to describe what happened.

A few months ago he decided he really wanted a motorcycle. At this point in time, we

received news that his cancer is a really complicated case and the chances of being cured

were really low if not non-existent. My husband told me he wants his own motorcycle before

he dies, and that this was essentially his dying wish. I talked about it with my mom and she

offered to pay for it all in one go, but told me it would take a while for her to send the

money. So the agreement was that I pay for it initially and the check she sends will be to

reimburse me for the money spent. I told my husband that the money I'm sending him is

specifically for the bike, and I sent him $8k.

Shortly after this, we received news that chemotherapy is no longer working and they are

looking into clinical trials. They would be prescribing him chemo pills the next week to

hopefully hold back the cancer while they wait for him to be approved for clinical trials. He

took this news hard and decided he wanted to go back to his home city to see friends and

family before he started treatment again. I told him buying plane tickets the day before the

flight is extremely expensive, especially if it was a direct flight. So I asked him if he was ok

either waiting a few days to help lower the cost or taking a layover. He was extremely against

both and said this is his last time to see his friends and family again before he likely dies from

cancer, so I bought the plane ticket he wanted.

The flights usually cost around $250, but his ticket cost $800.

On top of that, he misplaced his wallet shortly before he was supposed to leave for the

airport and broke a hole in one of our walls, broke a chair, and broke our bedroom door.

When I confronted him about it he brushed it off and told me

to just buy another door and it's not that big of a deal.

While he was in his home city, he decided to go to a casino with his friends without informing

me and told them he gambled about $1k and profited $1k. Then spent the rest of the day

spoiling his friends and buying them things they wanted

(I only found out after he returned home).

When he returned home, I finally received the money from my mom so I asked my husband

how much is left to owe on the bike. He told me "you never told me that money was for the

bike. Just pay it off with your card". I got upset and told him I did in fact tell him, and I sent

him $8k. What else did he think that money is for and if he still had it. He told me again just

to pay it off with my card and "I don't know why you're making a big deal out of it". I suspect

that $8k was partially used to gamble, but he has been guarding

his phone so I cannot check his transaction history.

On top of that, he hasn't been taking his chemo pills like he was supposed to. I told him if

he's not taking it then he needs to tell his oncology team. I've been telling him for days to

inform them and he snapped at me and told me to mind my own business and that I was

being annoying, and that if I kept bringing it up he

would start excluding me from anything medical related.

I'm exhausted and burnt out. I'm trying my best to support him but feeling like my efforts are

not appreciated are starting to really take a toll on me. Ever since he was diagnosed, he has

not thanked me once for anything I've done for him. There has been no acknowledgement

whatsoever. Not about marrying him to get him on health insurance, not about covering all

our expenses, not about paying for all his medical bills. The money I've spent for him in the

last year has been in the tens of thousands and he doesn't even acknowledge it.

I know he's spiraling because he's basically being forced to face an early death, but he's

dragging me down with him and he refuses any kind of therapy to help deal with it. How do I

tell him I'm feeling underappreciated without causing

an argument or making him feel like a burden?

Update: I am trying to reply as many comments as I can

but they are coming in fast and I'm currently at work so it might take a while.

Also to clarify, we do not have any joint accounts. The bike was taken out from a loan under

his name, which is why I sent him money for it. Any money he spends was sent from me.

Update 2: Sorry this post is gaining more traction than I thought and I'm afraid my husband

or his friends will find it and I don't know how my husband will react if he reads it. So if you

guys could try to keep this post on the down low that would be great lol

Few experiences are as emotionally exhausting as loving someone who is facing a life-threatening illness while quietly watching yourself disappear in the process.

Caregiving often asks people to be endlessly patient, compassionate, and resilient, yet caregivers are still human.

They can grieve, become overwhelmed, and feel invisible too. In this story, the wife wasn’t struggling because her husband had cancer.

She was struggling because the emotional and financial partnership that once defined their marriage had slowly been replaced by one-sided sacrifice without acknowledgment or shared responsibility.

The emotional dynamics are heartbreaking because both people appear to be responding to the same tragedy in very different ways.

The husband is confronting the possibility of a shortened future, something that can trigger fear, anger, denial, and impulsive attempts to reclaim a sense of control or experience life before it feels too late.

Buying a motorcycle, spending freely, gambling, and avoiding treatment may all reflect someone wrestling with mortality rather than simply making reckless choices.

At the same time, the wife’s experience is equally real.

She has taken on the roles of spouse, financial provider, insurance advocate, transportation partner, and emotional support while continuing to work.

Instead of feeling like they are facing cancer together, she increasingly feels as though she is carrying both the illness and the consequences of his decisions by herself.

A perspective that often gets overlooked is that serious illness can create what psychologists sometimes call “survival asymmetry.”

The patient becomes the understandable focus of everyone’s concern, while the caregiver’s exhaustion quietly fades into the background.

Because the caregiver is physically healthy, others may assume they are coping better than they actually are. Yet compassion does not require accepting every behavior.

Supporting someone through a terminal illness is different from absorbing financial deception, emotional withdrawal, or repeated disregard for shared responsibilities.

Recognizing that distinction is not a lack of empathy, it is a recognition that two people are suffering, not just one.

Viewed through that lens, the wife’s desire to feel appreciated is not selfish, it reflects a fundamental human need to know that her sacrifices are seen and valued.

Her husband’s fear and grief deserve compassion, but compassion does not require ignoring behaviors that threaten their financial security or refusing treatment without honest discussion.

If their relationship is to survive alongside his illness, both realities must be acknowledged: one person is fighting cancer, and the other is fighting to keep their shared life from collapsing under its weight.

Sometimes the strongest form of love is not endless giving, but creating enough honesty that both people’s pain can finally be recognized.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These Redditors urged the OP to stop funding the husband’s reckless spending and protect her finances

Accurate-Food3249 − I think in addition to letting him know that he’s abusing your kindness,

you also need to stop being afraid to tell him no. These are huge and expensive requests he’s

making and he won’t have to live with the repercussions of any of them but you will. It’s

incredibly selfish of him not to see or consider that, especially if he loves you.

peaches_and_drama − He will die and you will be shackled with significant amounts of debt

and picking up the pieces. It sounds like he’s accepted death and is willingly stopping

treatment so he can have short-term fun. He doesn’t want to go to a therapist that will

dissuade him from his impulsive decisions or that might uncover he’s doing other things

against medical advice (like drugs).

But he’s also not acting like a husband. I would cut off the finances. Give him a small

allowance and move your money to a new account he can’t touch. Keep groceries in the

house. If he wants more money he can work.

Keep in mind he might open up lines of debt or credit cards.

Stay married if you want for health insurance but you need to talk to a lawyer to find out if

you’re liable for any debt he racks up. He is guaranteed to keep acting impulsively and you

need to start protecting himself. If it was me,

I’d be looking at filing for divorce to protect yourself.

qtqy − He is dying and he's acting out. He is taking advantage for sure. And frankly idk what

to recommend other than stop giving him money and access to your funds.

He sounds like he's become quite selfish which is very sad

bluepvtstorm − He is dying and leaving you in debt. Does he have a life insurance policy to

pay off this stuff? Does he have stuff you can sell to pay off this debt. I get it. He is dying

maybe but he is taking you to his grave with him with this stress. He is angry and violent.

You need to tell him no and be prepared to leave him where he is. Lock all your credit cards

and bank accounts. You will be left to clean this up if he does die

and you will be left to clean it up if he doesn’t.

Historical-Composer2 − Marrying him was a mistake. He’s spending money as if he’s

planning on dying, so he doesn’t have to worry about the debt he’s creating and fallout from

what comes with that. And now that you are married, it’s marital debt and YOU will be

responsible for all of it, if and when he passes. Where is his family during all of this?

He needs therapy, not motorcycles and casinos.

And you need to divorce him before he lands you in tens of thousands of dollars in debt.

ethelmertz623 − So sorry for everything you are going through. You need to cut off his

access to your money completely today!

You can then give him money for what is necessary but need to explain to him that while you

understand him wanting to make the most out of what time is left, you will be left grieving

him and deep in debt and if he loves you, he shouldn’t want to do that to you.

I’m sure there are many valid psychological reasons for his behavior but it is worth noting, his

disease may be legitimately altering his mind and his ability to think straight and this needs

to be addressed (perhaps also documented legally to help you

with not paying some of his bills). I hate to say this….

but are you with him at these doctors appointments to know

that this illness is all real and not a big scam?

This group suggested therapy or medical evaluation, saying illness may explain his behavior

InfernalWedgie − If his behavior/personality have shifted radically, have you considered the

possibility that he might have metastasis in his brain? If that isn't it, he needs to talk to a

therapist who knows how to help patients cope with a hard diagnosis. His hospital should be

able to connect you to resources.

Lastly, whatever insane expenses need to come out of his account, not yours.

If you think death with do you part fairly soon, keep separate finances.

archlich − How incredibly sad. I’m sorry for all you’re going through. That is a lot to take on. If

he won’t do therapy I highly recommend that you do. It does sound like he’s deeply

depressed I’m not sure there’s anything you can do,

I’d maybe reach out to local support groups, ask the doctor if there are any.

Be as supportive as you can be, but please please please take care of yourself.

BraveWarrior-55 − Whenever you enable someone, you take away their self respect. The

situation you two are in is you are the 'parent' who works, pays all the bills, doles out

spending money, and ok's his wishes. He is now essentially a 'child' under your control, so of

course he is not happy with this. He is facing death and is not even a functioning adult.

Is he able to work even a part time job? That would help him feel independent and more

mature. You are feeling underappreciated because you ARE. You have done too much and

taken away his self reliance. You and your mom are treating him like a child getting a Make a

Wish dream come true (motorcycle as an example) You two need couples counseling asap.

He could use it also to help deal with his diagnosis too.

These commenters advised securing legal, financial, and disability protections immediately

ChaoticCrashy − Please file for social security disability today for/with your husband. He has

benefits available for him- if he applies. He will get benefits from the day he applies. You

need to do this ASAP Edit: I wish more people knew about this. Thanks for the awards, but

please share the information along. 😉😊

No-Potato9477 − Please check your credit report to make sure he isn’t taking out any credit

cards with your name on them.

runningonrun − OP, this was difficult to read. I’m sorry you’re being financially abused but

this is not ok. I’m a cancer surgeon. I see patients who are grateful for their partners who stay

with them and support them. I also see some patients who become abusive to their spouses

but this is less common. The spouse or loved one/caregiver

goes through incredible stresses during this time.

There is research out there on the significant weight placed on the caregivers in the setting of

cancer care. But this does NOT give anyone an excuse to do what your husband is doing to

you. You have access to his medical records, right? You go to all the medical appointments?

His prognosis is not “hearsay” from him, right?

It’s directly from the physicians who are treating him? I don’t want to even think this but I

want to make sure you’re not being lied to about his prognosis and being taken more

advantage of. I would stop bending to his whims and demands. No motorcycle, no flights to

see friends. He can work part time to make money if he wants fun money.

And divorce should be considered.

At its heart, this story isn’t just about money, it’s about compassion, burnout, and what happens when one partner’s crisis begins consuming the other.

The OP has gone to extraordinary lengths to support her husband through an unimaginable diagnosis, but many readers felt that illness doesn’t excuse dishonesty, financial recklessness, or shutting out the person carrying so much of the burden.

Others pointed out that grief and fear can drive people to make destructive choices.

Do you think the OP should keep trying to support him through this spiral, or is it time to start protecting her own well-being? Share your thoughts in the comments below.